Sen. Paul Wellstone was killed Friday when
his small chartered plane crashed near an airport runway,
Democratic sources said.

Sen. Paul Wellstone and his wife, Sheila, met with reporters on Feb. 24 to announce that Sen. Wellstone has a mild form of multiple sclerosis. Mrs. Wellstone and the couple's daughter were among those killed.

EVELETH, Minn. (AP) - Sen. Paul Wellstone, an outspoken liberal
Democrat locked in a re-election battle considered key to control
of the Senate, was killed in a plane crash Friday in northern
Minnesota along with his wife, daughter and five others.

The twin-engine private plane went down in freezing rain and
light snow near the Eveleth-Virginia Municipal Airport, about 175
miles north of Minneapolis. The cause of the crash was under
investigation.

Wellstone, a 58-year-old former college professor and one of the
foremost liberals on Capitol Hill, was on his way to the funeral of
the father of a state lawmaker.

"It's just terrible. Say a prayer," said Lisa Pattni, an aide
who was at the crash site.

All eight people aboard the 11-seat King Air A-100 were killed,
said Greg Martin, spokesman for the Federal Aviation
Administration. Campaign officials confirmed the victims also
included Wellstone's wife, Sheila, and daughter, Marcia; three
campaign staff members; and two pilots.

Wellstone's death just 11 days before Election Day threw the
battle for the Senate into uncharted territory. Before Friday,
Democrats held control by a single seat.

State officials were researching whether Wellstone's name would
remain on the ballot, or whether independent Gov. Jesse Ventura or
state Democrats could appoint a replacement to serve in the
upcoming lame-duck session of Congress between Election Day and the
arrival of new members.

State law allows the governor to fill a vacant Senate seat, but
also allows a political party to appoint a replacement in the event
of a death of a nominee. The name must be offered within seven days
of the death and at least four days before an election.

Shaken Democratic officials wouldn't immediately comment on
possible replacements, though party spokesman Bill Amberg said he
was confident the party would be allowed to offer a replacement.
Rebecca Yanisch, the state trade commissioner who ran for Senate in
2000, indicated she might be interested.

Two years ago, Missouri Gov. Mel Carnahan was killed in a plane
crash three weeks before Election Day while running for the Senate.
Carnahan's name remained on the ballot and he beat Republican Sen.
John Ashcroft. Carnahan's widow, Jean, was appointed to serve in
his place and is now seeking election to a full term against
Republican Jim Talent.

Wellstone was up against Republican Norm Coleman, a former mayor
of St. Paul and President Bush's choice to challenge the two-term
incumbent. A Coleman spokesman, Ben Whitney, said: "Our prayers
are with the Wellstone family. That's all I'm going to say."

Ventura said flags at state buildings would be flown at
half-staff through Nov. 5. In Texas, Bush called Wellstone "a man
of deep convictions."

Wellstone's campaign office area became the site of a memorial after area residents received word of the senator's death.

"He was a plainspoken fellow who did his best for his state and
for his country," the president said. "May the good Lord bless
those who grieve."

Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., called Wellstone the
"soul of the Senate. He was one of the most noble and courageous
men I have ever known."

Before running for office, Wellstone was a professor and
community organizer who fused the two passions in a course he
taught at Carleton College in Northfield called "Social Movements
and Grassroots Organizing."

He stunned the political establishment by knocking off
Republican Sen. Rudy Boschwitz with a longshot bid for office in
1990. Afterward, left-leaning Mother Jones magazine called him
"the first 1960s radical elected to the U.S. Senate."

Wellstone's opponent in the camapaign for U.S. Senate, former St. Paul mayor Norm Coleman, suspended campaign activities in the wake of Wellstone's death.
Listen to his statement.

Wellstone had pledged to stay for no more than two terms, but
last year, he announced he would be running again. In February, he
announced he had been diagnosed with a mild form of multiple
sclerosis but he said it wouldn't stop his campaign.

"For me, no stress would be stress," Wellstone said at the
time. "The stress of this campaign is what I want to do, to be
perfectly honest. And the stress of being a senator is what I want
to do."

State Democratic Party chairman Mike Erlandson said Wellstone
for years had been "the heartbeat" of the party.

"He took pride every day in fighting on behalf of the people of
Minnesota," he said.

Liberal to the end, Wellstone cast his vote earlier this month
against legislation to authorize the use of force in Iraq - the
only Democrat in a competitive race to go against Bush on the
issue.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson and United Nations Secretary-General Kofi
Annan both called Wellstone a champion of peace.

"He was a profoundly decent man, a man of principle, a man of
conscience," Annan said.

"Wellstone stood up for the little guy," added AFL-CIO
President John Sweeney. "He was tireless and unapologetic for
championing the rights of working men and women - even when he
stood alone, and he often did."

Wellstone also had two sons, David and Mark, and six
grandchildren.

The King Air turboprop was made by Raytheon Corp. with Pratt &
Whitney engines, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.
The owner was listed as Beech Transportation Inc. of Eden Prairie,
Minn., and the plane had been leased by Wellstone.